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DACCA

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 726 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DACCA  , a

city of
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British India, giving its name to a
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district and division of Eastern Bengal and
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Assam . It was made the capital of that province on its creation in
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October 1905 . The city is 254 M . N.E. by E. of
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Calcutta, on an old channel of the Ganges . Railway station, ro m. from the
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terminus of the
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river steamers at Narayanganj . The
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area is about 8 sq. m . The .population in 1901 was 90,542 . The ruins of the
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English factory, St Thomas's church, and the houses of the
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European residents lie along the river banks . Of the old fort erected by
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Islam Khan, who in 16o8 was appointed
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nawab of Bengal, and removedhis capital from
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Rajmahal to Dacca, no vestige remains; but the jail is built on a portion of its site . The
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principal
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Mahommedan public buildings, erected by subsequent
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governors and now in ruins, are the Katra and the Lal-bagh palace—the former built by Sultan Mahommed Shuja in 1645, in front of the chauk or market place . Its extensive front faced the river, and had a lofty central gateway, flanked by smaller entrances, and by two octagonal towers rising to some height above the
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body of the
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building . The Lal-bagh palace was commenced by Azam Shah, the third son of the emperor Aurangzeb .

It origin-ally stood

close to the Buriganga river; but the channel has shifted its course, and there is now an intervening space covered with trees between. it and the river . The walls on the western side, and the terrace and battlement towards the river, are of a considerable height, and
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present a commanding aspect from the
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water . These outworks, with a few gateways, the audience hall and the
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baths, were the only parts of the building that survived in 184o . Since then their dilapidation has rapidly advanced; but even in ruin they show the extensive and magnificent scale on which this princely residence was originally designed . It appears never to have been completed; and when
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Jean
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Baptiste Tavernier visited Dacca (c . 1666), the nawab was residing in a temporary wooden building in its court . The English factory was built about that
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year . The central
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part of the old. factory continued to be used as a court-house till the 19th century, but owing to its ruinous state it was pulled down in 1829 or 1830; in 184o the only portion that remained was the outward wall . The French and Dutch factories were taken possession of by the English in the years 1778 and 1781 respectively . In the mutiny of 1857 two companies of the 73rd Native
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Infantry which were stationed in the
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town joined in the revolt, but were overpowered by a small European force and dispersed . The city still shows some signs of its former magnificence . The famous manufacture of
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fine muslins is almost
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extinct, but the
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carving of shells, carried on from ancient times, is an important industry in the city .

There are a

Government college, a collegiate school and an unaided
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Hindu college . There is a large settlement of mixed Portuguese descent, known as Feringhis . Many of the public buildings, including the college, suffered severely from the
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earthquake of the r2th of
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June 1897; and
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great damage was done by tornadoes in
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April of 1888 and 1902 . The district of Dacca comprises an area of 2782 sq. m . In 1901 the population was 2,649,522, showing an increase of 11% in the decade . The district consists of a vast level plain, divided into two sections by the Dhaleswari river . The
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northern part, again intersected by the Lakshmia river, contains the city of Dacca, and as a
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rule lies well above flood-level . Dacca is watered by a network of rivers and streams, ten of which are navigable throughout the year by native cargo boats of four tons burthen . Among them are the
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Meghna, the Ganges or Padma, the Lakshmia, a branch of the
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Brahmaputra, the Jamuna, or main stream of the Brahmaputra, the Mendi-Khali, a large branch of the Meghna, the Dhaleswari, an offshoot of the Jamuna, the Ghazi-khali and the Buriganga . The
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soil is composed of red ferruginous kankar, with a stratum of clay in the more elevated parts, covered by a thin layer of
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vegetable
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mould, or by
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recent alluvial deposits . The scenery along the Lakshmia is very beautiful, the banks being high and wooded . About 20 M. north of Dacca city, small ridges are met with in the Madhupur jungle, stretching into Mymensingh district .

These hills, how-ever, are

mere mounds of from 20 to 40 ft. high, composed of red soil containing a considerable quantity of iron ore; and the whole tract is for the most part unproductive . Towards the city the red soil is intersected by creeks and morasses, whose margins yield crops, of rice,
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mustard and til seed; while to the east of the town, a broad, alluvial, well-cultivated plain reaches as far as the junction of the Dhaleswari and Lakshmia rivers . The country lying to the south of the Dhaleswari is the most fertile part of the district . It consists entirely of rich alluvial soil, annually inundated to a
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depth varying from 2 to 14 ft. of water . The villages are built on artificial mounds of earth, so as to raise them above the flood-level . The wild animals found in the district comprise a few tigers, leopards and wild elephants, deer, wild pig, porcupines, jackals, foxes,
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hares, otters, &c . The green
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monkey is very,
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common;. porpoises abound in the large rivers . The manufactures consist of
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weaving, embroidery, gold and
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silver
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work, shell-carving and pottery . The weaving' industry and the manufacture of fine Dacca muslins have greatly fallen off, owing to the competition of European piece goods .
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Forty different kinds of
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cloth were formerly manufactured in this district, the bulk of which during many years was made from English twist, country thread being used only for the finest muslins . It is said that, in the time of the emperor Jahangir, a piece of muslin, 15 ft. by 3, could be manufactured, weighing only 900 grains, its value being X40 . In 184o the finest cloth that could be made of the above dimensions weighed about 1600 grains, and was worth £1o .

Since then the manufacture has still further decayed, and the finer kinds are not now made at all except to

order . The district is traversed by a
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line of the Eastern Bengal railway, but most of the
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traffic is still conducted by water . It is a centre of the jute trade . The division of Dacca occupies the delta of the Brahmaputra, where it joins the main stream of the Ganges . It consists of the four districts of Dacca, Mymensingh, Faridpur and Backergunge . Its area is 15,837 sq. m . Its population in Igor was 10,793,988 .

End of Article: DACCA
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